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Infection and Immunity, May 2000, p. 2713-2719, Vol. 68, No. 5
Immunobiology Section, Laboratory of
Parasitic Diseases,1 and Laboratory of
Cellular and Molecular Immunology,2 National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Received 25 October 1999/Returned for modification 15 December
1999/Accepted 17 February 2000
Resistance to Toxoplasma gondii has been shown to be
mediated by gamma interferon (IFN-
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Host Resistance and Immune Deviation in Pigeon Cytochrome
c T-Cell Receptor Transgenic Mice Infected with
Toxoplasma gondii

) produced by NK,
CD4+, and CD8+ T cells. While studies of SCID
mice have implicated NK cells as the source of the cytokine in acute
infection, several lines of evidence suggest that IFN-
production by
CD4+ T lymphocytes also plays an important role in
controlling early parasite growth. To evaluate whether this function is
due to nonspecific as opposed to T-cell receptor (TCR)-dependent
stimulation by the parasite, we have examined the resistance to
T. gondii infection of pigeon cytochrome c
transgenic (PCC-Tg) Rag-2
/
mice in which all
CD4+ T lymphocytes are unreactive with the protozoan. When
inoculated with the ME49 strain, PCC-Tg animals exhibited only
temporary control of acute infection and succumbed by day 17. Intracellular cytokine staining by flow cytometry revealed that, in
contrast to infected nontransgenic controls, infected PCC-Tg animals
failed to develop IFN-
-producing CD4+ T cells. Moreover,
the CD4+ lymphocytes from these mice showed no evidence of
activation as judged by lack of upregulated expression of CD44 or CD69.
Nevertheless, when acutely infected transgenic mice were primed by PCC
injection, the lymphokine responses measured after in vitro antigen
restimulation displayed a strong Th1 bias which was shown to be
dependent on endogenous interleukin 12 (IL-12). The above findings
argue that, while T. gondii-induced IL-12 cannot trigger
IFN-
production by CD4+ T cells in the absence of TCR
ligation, the pathogen is able to nonspecifically promote Th1 responses
against nonparasite antigens, an effect that may explain the
immunostimulatory properties of T. gondii infection.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Bldg. 4, Room
126, National Institutes of Health, 4 Center Dr., Bethesda, MD
20892-0425. Phone: (301) 496-8218. Fax: (301) 402-0890. E-mail:
CCOLLAZO{at}niaid.nih.gov.
Present address: Department of Immunobiology, Guy's, King's, and
St. Thomas' Medical School, London, United Kingdom SE1 9RT.
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